Robert Hinton Avery W v. Danielle Beauzil

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 27, 2026
Docket4D2026-0921
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Hinton Avery W v. Danielle Beauzil (Robert Hinton Avery W v. Danielle Beauzil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Hinton Avery W v. Danielle Beauzil, (Fla. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

ROBERT HINTON AVERY, Petitioner,

v.

DANIELLE BEAUZIL, Respondent.

Nos. 4D2026-0406 and 4D2026-0921

[May 27, 2026]

Consolidated petitions for writs of mandamus and certiorari to the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward County; Catalina Avalos, Judge; L.T. Case No. 062024DR016304AXXXCE.

Robert Hinton Avery, Pembroke Pines, pro se.

No appearance for respondent.

PER CURIAM.

On Order to Show Cause

In these two consolidated cases, we ordered petitioner Robert Hinton Avery— the husband in the underlying divorce case—to show cause why this Court should not impose the sanction of no longer accepting his pro se filings. Having considered his response, we conclude that sanctions are appropriate.

4D2026-0406

In case number 4D2026-0406, petitioner filed a pro se document titled: “VERIFIED URGENT AND EXPEDITIED [sic] PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS AND ALTERNATIVE URGENT WRIT OF PROHIBITION WITH INCORPORATED REQUEST FOR EMERGENCY STAY.” The 41-page, single- spaced document was generated using artificial intelligence (AI) and includes a “supplemental memorandum of law.” Among other things, the petition sought to compel a ruling on more than 90 pro se motions that petitioner has filed below. The petition also sought a writ of prohibition and asked us to disqualify the trial court or find that the trial court lacks jurisdiction under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA). We initially dismissed the petition for non-payment of the filing fee, but when the filing fee was paid about a month-and-a-half after the petition was filed, we reinstated the petition.

Soon thereafter, petitioner filed a first supplement to the petition, adding 24 more single-spaced pages of AI-generated argument and advising that, a month prior (about a week after the petition was filed), the trial court had ruled on 39 of his motions. Among other things, the supplement raised a frivolous argument that the trial court lacked jurisdiction and that proceedings were automatically stayed because petitioner had filed a motion to disqualify. 1 See Letterese v. Brody, 985 So. 2d 597, 598 (Fla. 4th DCA 2008) (explaining that the filing of a motion to disqualify and/or prohibition petition does not deprive the trial court of jurisdiction). According to petitioner, his disqualification motion allegedly excused his failure to appear for hearings in the trial court. The supplement also attempted to argue the merits of the 39 motions.

Petitioner then filed a second-supplemental memorandum adding 19 more single-spaced pages of AI-generated argument. These filings were accompanied by more than 1,000 pages of documents, including many more AI-generated documents and charts.

The petition in this case contains frivolous and misleading arguments. In the underlying case, petitioner filed numerous unauthorized motions to vacate that were directed at nonfinal orders. Guglielmi v. Guglielmi, 324 So. 3d 554, 557 (Fla. 1st DCA 2021) (holding that rule 1.540 motions directed at nonfinal orders are unauthorized and not appealable). In those motions, and again in this petition, petitioner contends that orders entered by a prior judge or before a UCCJEA affidavit was filed are void. The petition states that “[o]rders entered by a disqualified judge are voidable and must be vacated upon proper motion. See Fischer v. Knuck, 497 So. 2d 240 (Fla. 1986); MacKenzie v. Super Kids Bargain Store, Inc., 565 So. 2d 1332 (Fla. 1990).” (emphasis supplied).

This argument misstates the law, and the cited cases do not support the argument. See Fla. R. Gen. Prac. & Jud. Admin. 2.330(j) (allowing a successor judge to reconsider the rulings of a prior judge). The law does not support petitioner’s argument at all.

These types of AI-hallucinated arguments are just as egregious as a citation to non-existent law. See Clerk of Court & Comptroller for 13th Judicial Circuit, Hillsborough Cnty. v. Rangel, 427 So. 3d 1069, 1071 (Fla. 2d DCA 2025) (sanctioning counsel for filing a brief that, among other things, “misstated court holdings”). Pro se litigants and attorneys are responsible for their AI-generated filings and may be subject to sanctions for filings that contain fictitious authority or “cite actual cases for inaccurate legal propositions.” Hessert v. Hessert, 51

1 This Court has seen this AI-hallucinated argument often. Seeing it at all is too often. 2 Fla. L. Weekly D520 (Fla. 6th DCA March 20, 2026). Pro se litigants are not held to a lesser standard. Goya v. Hayashida, 418 So. 3d 652, 655 (Fla. 4th DCA 2025).

The delay in filing a UCCJEA affidavit does not deprive the trial court of jurisdiction or void the orders entered before the affidavit was filed. Holub v. Holub, 54 So. 3d 585, 588 (Fla. 1st DCA 2011). When viewed in this case’s context, this argument is frivolous. The wife filed a UCCJEA affidavit in her domestic violence case against petitioner in September 2024. In October 2025, petitioner filed an emergency motion in this divorce case to correct the affidavit. He filed a corrected affidavit and alleged that the wife had failed to include his eldest child with another woman in the affidavit. He argued that Florida has jurisdiction over all three of his children. Despite this, petitioner now claims the trial court lacks jurisdiction, and the orders which the trial court had entered before the wife filed an affidavit in this case are void.

Florida clearly has jurisdiction over the two children of this marriage, which is all that is relevant. The trial court’s orders are not void. These arguments are frivolous and present no basis for prohibition relief.

Finally, prohibition cannot be used to seek disqualification of a trial judge in the first instance. Letterese, 985 So. 2d at 598 (explaining that “a district court errs in entering an order of prohibition without permitting the trial judge to ascertain whether to disqualify him or herself”) (citations omitted). Petitioner’s request that this Court disqualify the successor trial judge is frivolous. See Fla. R. Gen. Prac. & Jud. Admin. 2.330(i) (“[A] successor judge cannot be disqualified based on a successive motion by the same party unless the successor judge rules that he or she is in fact not fair or impartial in the case.”).

4D2026-0921

In case number 4D2026-0921, petitioner filed an AI-generated certiorari petition seeking review of a March 2, 2026, order that denied his motion to vacate an April 2, 2025, agreed order referring the parties to a parenting program for petitioner to begin therapeutic supervised timesharing with the parties’ two children.

Petitioner, however, has refused to exercise this timesharing. In the March 2026 order, the trial court granted petitioner’s motion to stay the April 2025 agreed timesharing order. The court lifted the stay and allowed petitioner to commence timesharing. The court also granted his request for an evidentiary hearing on temporary timesharing and ordered the parties to schedule the hearing with the judicial assistant. The court noted that it had twice tried to conduct hearings, but petitioner failed to appear. The court cautioned him that

3 failure to appear at future hearings may result in sanctions, including striking his pleadings.

The March 2026 nonfinal order denying the motion to vacate is not appealable or subject to certiorari review. Guglielmi, 324 So. 3d at 557.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Haft v. Adams
238 So. 2d 843 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1970)
USAA Casualty Insurance Co. v. Pembroke Pines MRI, Inc.
24 So. 3d 588 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2009)
LETTERESE v. Brody
985 So. 2d 597 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2008)
Fischer v. Knuck
497 So. 2d 240 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1986)
Pflaum v. PFLAUM
974 So. 2d 579 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2008)
MacKenzie v. Super Kids Bargain Store, Inc.
565 So. 2d 1332 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1990)
Holub v. Holub
54 So. 3d 585 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2011)
Ardis v. Pensacola State College
128 So. 3d 260 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Robert Hinton Avery W v. Danielle Beauzil, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-hinton-avery-w-v-danielle-beauzil-fladistctapp-2026.